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Sorry, I didn't realize there was a contest to see who could be the most unhelpful *****! You win!! Since you were unable to comprehend the original post, let me review it for you. The codes are a symptom and not the actual problem. Also, the problem only manifests on long trips and everything is fine (i.e. no codes to diagnose) when driving around town. My option is to diagnose and fix the problem on my own, or wait until I'm in a serious bind in the middle of a trip and then delay my trip so a mechanic I'm completely unfamiliar with can try to diagnose the problem. Neither of those is acceptable, so I thought I would start on the forum where people are familiar with the issues. Now you are free to go suck the fun out of someone else's day!
Just made a trip from eastern NC to north central WV for my brother's wedding. Was pulling a 5x10 utility trailer with two dirt bikes (all WV weddings require dirt bikes, lol). We got caught in some construction traffic right before the NC Virginia border, barely creeping along for about 45 minutes. Construction ends and I hit the gas to get back up to speed. Kaput kaput bang kaput, tahoe sputters and acts like it's dying, but keeps running. We're trying to go downhill at this point, pedal on the floor, engine is at 4,000 rpms, no acceleration going downhill. I pull into the VA welcome center and creep to the side of the parking lot. Temps are good, oil is fine, transmission has fluid. I watched two videos on replacing the fuel pump thinking that might be what I'm about to do. Put the nearest Autozone in the gps and figured I would limp down the shoulder and get my codes read. Started the truck, went light on the gas, and got it up to 65. At that point, I told my wife we weren't stopping unless it fell apart. Made it to the Flying J truckstop in Wytheville, filled up with 92 octane and Lucas injector cleaner. Truck ran like new the rest of the way in (10 mpg when it was struggling, 16.6 mpg the rest of the way in). This was Friday evening.
Saturday morning I got up and unhooked the trailer. Took the tahoe for a drive around town and it was running like new. Good acceleration, no hesitation, no issues.
Sunday we hooked up to come home. Filled up an hour into the trip (high octane, and another bottle of injector cleaner), 20 minutes later the tahoe has no power and we're pulling 4,000 rpms to go 60 mph. Found an autozone and had them pull codes.
PO301 (cylinder misfire)
PO131 HO2S-11 (Bank 1 sensor 1) Circuit Low Input
PO151 HO2S-21 (Bank 2 Sensor 1) Circuit Low Input
PO446 EVAP Vent system performance
PO131 HO2S-11 (Bank 1 sensor 1) Circuit Low Input
PO151 HO2S-21 (Bank 2 Sensor 1) Circuit Low Input
P1133 HO2S-11 (Bank 1 Sensor 1) Insufficient Switching
P1153 HO2S-21 (Bank 2 Sensor 1) Insufficient Switching
Not worried about the EVAP code, but the others look expensive (but not fatal). I figured I'd force it home or break down near a dealership and trade. Limped back out to the road, no power on take off, dangerously slow acceleration, and NEW PROBLEM, the break pedal now goes all the way to the floor coming down the mountains. It still stops, but way more travel in the brake pedal (fluid was fine). Got to Wytheville and refilled at the Flying J with another bottle of Lucas. I shit you not, the truck ran like new all the way home. Started up fine this morning and runs like a champ, brake pedal was back to normal with the fill up in Wytheville.
Looking for advice on where to start. Not interested in taking it to a mechanic who will replace a valve spring and O2 sensors then tell me it's all better. I think the codes are symptoms of whatever is going on, but not the cause. Something electrical? My mind is boggled, and I can't drive 3.5 hours to Wytheville every time I need gas. Overheated tranny needing flushed, causing a bunch of other issues?
Thanks,
Brian